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realcaseyrollins ,

I thought sterilization was something California embraced openly but okay

venorathebarbarian ,

Ignoring what I assume is some anti-trans bullshit, do you understand the difference between force and consent?

If I choose to eat a hotdog that’s nothing noteworthy, if someone forcefully shoves a hotdog down my throat it’s assault.

Do you know understand what a hysterectomy does to a body? It’s more than just lacking a uterus/no more baby making/no more periods. It’s a major surgery that can come with major complications, including sending a person into early menopause, which starts a loss of fucking bone density. Would you be so casual about someone doing that to you or someone you love without their prior knowledge or consent?

Sit down and think of your favorite woman, whoever she may be, then picture her tearfully telling you she was given a major surgery by the government, that she did not want, that took away her ability to have children and sent her into early menopause. Would you be okay with someone making a casual joke about that? Would that be funny to you? I hope not. I hope you’d be able to empathize with her heartbreak.

livus ,
@livus@kbin.social avatar

What the hell? I thought this was going to be about historical stuff from last century. But:

Between 2005 and 2013, California surgically sterilized 144 people in women’s prisons. The majority of the sterilizations occurred at two prisons: Valley State Prison and California Institution for Women in Corona. A single doctor, James Heinrich, was responsible for arranging the bulk of those at Valley State Prison, telling a Reveal reporter the sterilizations were a cost-effective service “compared to what you save in welfare paying for these unwanted children—as they procreated more.” It was Heinrich, too, who arranged for Pulido to have a hysterectomy without explanation of what the procedure would entail.

The state ultimately banned sterilization as a method of birth control inside prisons and jails in 2014.

vlad76 ,
@vlad76@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

California is a fucked up place. I’m not saying that they’re unique, but they are one of the worst states.

DessertStorms , (edited )
@DessertStorms@kbin.social avatar

The state ultimately banned sterilization as a method of birth control inside prisons and jails in 2014.
2014!!!

Don't think they've actually stopped, they probably just frame it differently now (rather than "birth control", an act of "compassion", but eugenics either way, and perhaps even an act of genocide in some cases).

They do it to immigrants
In Canada (and no doubt elsewhere) they do it to Indigenous people
And of course disabled people

It's not like there's much to stop them targeting these groups.

LibertyLizard ,

The worst part is that it doesn’t seem like there was any kind of punishment for this doctor. Or at least I couldn’t find evidence of that and he may still be practicing? He’d be quite old at this point.

livus , (edited )
@livus@kbin.social avatar

Yeah it's insane. The doctor, James Heinrich, is retired (dead?) but sounds like a monster and had been sued multiple times for malpractice before the prison hired him. I wish there was a class action against him.

The worst part for me though is that there are women who were involuntarily sterilized there who are not eligible for compensation.

Some people had an endometrial ablation, a procedure where the uterine lining is destroyed to reduce, or sometimes stop, menstrual flow. Those with endometrial ablations don’t qualify for compensation, despite the likelihood of pregnancy after the procedure being incredibly low and the risks of miscarriage or other complications being much higher.

The compensation program also does not include a sizable group of victims of forced sterilizations—the more that 200 women sterilized at Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center between 1968 and 1974. These women, many of them Mexican migrants who spoke little to no English, were coerced into consenting to sterilizations while in labor without any information or translated materials describing what the procedure would mean.

raltoid ,

Eugenics remained alive and well in federal governement efforts until the late 70s. They just didn’t/don’t talk about it because of how the US supported Germany with that leading up to WW2. The Rockefeller Foundation funded eugenics research that employed Josef Mengele, and US literature was literally being used as templates for early Nazi cleansing programs.

en.wikipedia.org/…/Eugenics_in_the_United_States#…

The 1978 Federal Sterilization Regulations, created by the United States Department of Health, Education and Welfare or HEW, (now the United States Department of Health and Human Services) outline a variety of prohibited sterilization practices that were often used previously to coerce or force women into sterilization.

en.wikipedia.org/…/Eugenics_in_the_United_States#…

Eezyville ,
@Eezyville@sh.itjust.works avatar

I bet those women effected were black or Hispanic

livus ,
@livus@kbin.social avatar

Yes it looks like mostly Latina.

NewsAutoMod , (edited )

G’morning, Your title might not match the title of the article you linked! Could you please double check, and edit your post title if it indeed does not match? article title: “California struggles to locate victims of forced sterilization” (Similairity: ~52%).

BLEEP BLEEP this action was performed semi-automatically by a bot (:

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